The Eastern Promise collection comprises of two beautiful linens we have called DAMASCUS and PALMYRA. Much of the inspiration for these two designs has come from the magnificent textiles and ceramics of the Middle East and Central Asia. In acknowledgment of this extraordinary resource Lewis & Wood are donating £2 per metre of the Eastern Promise designs to The British Red Cross Syria Crisis Appeal.

We have embarked on a licensing agreement with the V&A Museum and on one of our first forays into the archive we came across the work of the Spitalfields silk designers. We felt these magnificent diagrams deserved a new lease of life as fabric prints and wallpapers, and the result is HANBURY, HAWKSMOOR, HUGUENOT and VALLANCE - contemporary interpretations of 18th century designs.

Taken from an original design by Joseph Dandridge, a natural history illustrator and silk pattern designer who lived in the Spitalfields area of East London. Named after Hanbury Hall in Spitalfields and printed on 100% washed linen with a textured background. Also available as a Wide Width Wallpaper.

A design from Joseph Dandridge incorporating both his knowledge of natural history and his skill as a designer. Given a new lease of life in vibrant colourways the wallpaper and fabric are named after Nicholas Hawksmoor, the architect responsible for the magnificent Christ Church, Spitalfields. Available as a Wide Width Wallpaper and Linen.

This astonishing brocade fabric is certainly something the Huguenot weavers would have been mesmerised by. A semi Chinese brocade with symmetrical patterning it is a tribute to those French refugee craftsmen of 300 years ago - and looks simply dazzling with the Lewis & Wood velvets.

Huguenot silk weaver and mill owner James Leman designed this beautiful filigree pattern, which we named after a street in Spitalfields with a suitably French and feminine name. Vallance comes as both a wallpaper and fabric.

Lucinda Rogers, a first year textiles student at Bath Spa University, was the deserving winner of our first Wide Width Wallpaper competition. Inspired by nature and growing up in a rural environment, her prize-winning design 'Cinda Roses' impressed the judges with it's composition, scale and incorporation of different elements.

Inspired by the traditions of North Africa and with a passion to produce something more contemporary in style, decorative artist Adam Calkin has created an exciting new geometric collection featuring timeless pattern repeats and shapes.

A luxurious Cotton Duchess Satin which offers the perfect plain to complement our patterned Wide Width Wallpapers. Available in 10 colourways and made from 100 % cotton this fabric will add an instant shot of glamour and style to any room and is ideal for curtains and blinds.

A beautiful ‘Anglaiserie’ design by decorative artist Alexander Hamilton featuring beech saplings in 5 soft peaceful colourways this was a big hit when first launched as a Wide Width Wallpaper. A tranquil and uplifting design in a soft 100 per cent linen it is ideal for bedrooms and living areas.

A dyed patchwork horizontal stripe, inspired by the wonderful textiles of Northern Iran which involved weaving, seaming, dyeing and overstitching, this is one of the most complicated and unique textiles Lewis & Wood have ever produced.

Designed by the talented artist Flora Roberts, who also created our best selling SIKA and DOVES wallpapers, the inspiration for this original wallpaper comes from the ancient carved Jordanian city of the same name.

This abstract design which was so well received as a Wide Width Wallpaper makes an excellent and heavy duty upholstery fabric. A bold and interesting choice, which has no vertical repeat, it can be joined in any direction and is available in two colourways, Choc Ice (seen here) and Gravel.

Take three talented artists – Melissa White, Flora Roberts and Su Daybell and give them the freedom to create a collection. This is what Lewis & Wood did and the result is the company’s most dynamic and ambitious collection to date.